The USC Institute for Global Health aims to improve global health by educating future and current global health leaders, carrying out trans-disciplinary research, and assuring that the evidence collected informs policy and practice to make a difference.

USC tobacco researchers honored by city officials

Government officials honored USC faculty Aug. 18 at Los Angeles City Hall for their public health work in tobacco control, prevention and research that formed the scientific foundation for local policies.

Los Angeles City Attorney Mike Feuer and City Councilmember Mitch O’Farrell commended Distinguished Professor Jonathan Samet, MD, MS, Flora L. Thornton Chair of the Department of Preventive Medicine, and Associate Dean for Community Initiatives Lourdes Baezconde-Garbanati, Ph.D., MPH, MA, Professor of Preventive Medicine, at the daily council meeting, followed by a reception.

“Dr. Jonathan Samet and Dr. Lourdes Baezconde-Garbanati have been devoting more than 25 years to tobacco research and action, and they provided the expert testimony on which this council relied,” Feuer said, referencing the city’s 2014 ban on the use of electronic smoking devices in smoke-free spaces, making Los Angeles the first major U.S. city to adopt strict e-cigarette rules.

Decades at the forefront of tobacco control

Samet, director of the USC Institute for Global Health, has participated since the 1980s in the reports of the U.S. surgeon general on smoking and health, and he served as senior scientific editor for the 50-year anniversary report in 2014. Most recently, he contributed to the 2016 surgeon general report on e-cigarettes and youth, the first of its kind. This fall he will step into a new role as dean of the Colorado School of Public Health.

“I began my career in public health research with the idea that research could make a difference—that what we did could impact policy—as it has,” Samet said. “If you look back at 30, 40 years of tobacco control, it’s not been so much at the national level, but at the local and state levels, where evidence-based actions have made a difference.”

“E-cigarettes have seen their biggest decline this year—ever—after a continuous streak of five consecutive years of triple-digit growth,” Baezconde-Garbanati said. “That’s due to the new local ordinances and state laws and the rising safety concerns that have been reported.”

Photo: City officials pose with USC tobacco control researchers honored Aug. 18 at Los Angeles City Hall. From left: Nora Manzanilla, Tobacco Enforcement Operations director for the Los Angeles City Attorney; Mitch O’Farrell, city councilmember representing the 13th District; Jonathan Samet, Flora L. Thornton Chair of the Department of Preventive Medicine at the Keck School of Medicine of USC; Lourdes Baezconde-Garbanati, Professor and Associate Dean for Community Initiatives in the Keck School of Medicine, Dean’s Office; and Mike Feuer, Los Angeles City Attorney. (Photo/Larissa Puro)